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The Great Depression and the New Deal
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Causes of the Great Depression Overproduction More products were manufactured than people could buy Speculation led to the 1929 stock market crash People invested in rising stock prices Speculation in real estate holdings In October 1929, stock prices fell in the crash
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The Human Impact of the Depression No safety net – high unemployment, bank failures, and foreclosures Recording of the misery Dorothea Lange – recorded the misery of the people in her photographs John Steinbeck – wrote about the suffering of migrant families during by the Depression in a series of articles – The Grapes of Wrath Dust Bowl 1930s – heavy winds carried top soil away, buried homes, and destroyed harvests. Over a million farmers were driven off their land Mexican Repatriation Act – to send Mexican American immigrants back to Mexico ½ a million were forcibly sent back, many may have been lawful American citizens
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Hoover Fails to Stop the Depression Rugged individualism Voluntary private organizations should provide emergency relief not the government Hoover’s Philosophy If prices drop low enough, people will buy, production would pick up, and employment would increase The lack of aggregate (total) demand prevented the economy from recovering and the Federal Reserve reduced the money supply rather than increasing it Hoover responds Cut taxes Increased federal spending on public works Buy surplus farm crops Reconstruction Finance Corporation – emergency loans to banks and businesses Too little too late Families lost their home – Hoovervilles sprang up out side of cities 100,000+ businesses failed 25% were unemployed
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Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Philosophy & Style Brain trust – a group of talented adviser to President Roosevelt Fireside chats – he used the radio to speak directly to the American people Eleanor Roosevelt, was his eyes and ears by traveling throughout the country Frances Perkins – 1 st women Cabinet member, appointed as Secretary of Labor in 1933 New Deal – his program for lifting the nation out of the Great Depression Called Congress into special session to pass legislation Most was enacted by Congress in 100 days Focused on “Relief, Recovery, and Reform”
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New Deal Legislation Relief – short term actions designed to tide people over until the economy recovered Bank Holiday – closed all banks Created government jobs to get people back to work – Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) – Public Works Administration (PWA) – Works Progress Administration (WPA) Recovery – restore incentives to produce Priming the pump National Recovery Administration (NRA) Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
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New Deal Legislation Reform – measures to remedy defects of the U.S economy to prevent future depressions Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) – insured bank deposits to restore people’s confidence in the nation’s banks Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) – a watching agency to watch over stock markets and prevent another collapse Social Security Act – provided a safety net for workers with unemployment insurance, old age pensions, and insurance for families of those who died pensions, and insurance for families of those who died early; paid for contributions by both employees and employers
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Gold Standard & Fiat Money During the 1800s’ the US had a bi-metalic system of money. It was on the gold standard but silver was also traded. The use of the gold standard came to the end in 1933 when President F. Roosevelt issued an Executive Order outlawing the ownership of gold, except for jewelry. Roosevelt wanted people to rely on paper money (fiat money) in order to expand the money supply and stimulate economic activity.
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Reaction to the New Deal Liberty League – charged Roosevelt a traitor to his class attempting to establish a dictatorship Dr. Francis Townsend – said Roosevelt did not go far enough, his plan was to give $200 a month to all those over 65, and had to spend it in that month, it would create jobs and end the Depression Huey Long – US Senator, Governor of Louisiana, give each family $5,000 a year, to be paid for by taxing the rich. Father Coughlin – give radio addresses, called for the nationalization of banks and utilities, he was violently anti-Semitic
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The Supreme Court & The New Deal The NRA gave the President the power to set up codes of fair practices for businesses involved in intrastate commerce. Schechter Poultry v. US 1937 – Schechter claimed the NIRA was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court ruled that even during a national crisis, Congress could not give the President more powers than those granted in the Constitution. Roosevelt thought Justices were too old and out of touch. He proposed to add a new justice for each Justice that was over 70 ½ years old. This court-packing scheme was widely viewed as an attempt to upset traditional separation of powers.
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